大学英语 第1单元TAXTA+TEXTB

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大学英语课件unit 1_Text B

大学英语课件unit 1_Text B

4. In “the black cat”, the adj. “black”modifies the noun “cat”.
peculiar a. 1) strange or unusual, esp. in a troubling or an unpleasant way 奇怪的,异常的 This meat tastes peculiar; I hope it’s all right.
order to improve it 更改,修正(使改善)
e.g. 1.In only 20 years the developing country has been
transformed into an advanced industrial power.
2. The heating system has recently been modified to make it more efficient. 3. She had to alter her clothes after losing weight.
有异味
2) belonging only (to…); exclusive 特有的,专有的 This style of cooking is peculiar to the northeast of the country.
这家酒店给客人提供丰富多彩的娱乐活动。
The hotel offers its guests a wide diversity / variety of amusements. 衣食住都是生活的必须品。 Food, clothing and shelter are all basic necessities of lifdden very strong

全新版大学英语第二版unit1textB单词讲解

全新版大学英语第二版unit1textB单词讲解

cost you about fifty additional troops to
bucks.
the region.
那可能会花费你大约 美国正在往该地区派
五十美元。
遣额外的部队。
geode
crack
n. 晶洞,异质晶簇; vt. 使破裂; 打开 ;
淋巴腔
变声
A gas main had cracked under my neighbour's garage and gas had seeped into our homes.
adopt
perspective
vt. 采取;接受;收 n. 观点;远景;透视
养;正式通过

The group is ...two
different
working to promote perspectives on the
the adoption of nature of adolescent
她照顾艾米是有津贴 的
told me to see someone inside the bank.
我到取款机前取款,
operation
protest
n. 操作;经营;[外 vt. 抗议;断言
科] 算
手术;[数][计]

They protesting
were soaring
There are three ski prices.
features - an eight- 他请求离开房间的许 mile bank of 可。 pebbles shelving
abruptly into the sea.
…这个地区最奇怪的
buck
additional

2世纪大学英语读写第一册unit1TEXT B 课文及课后题

2世纪大学英语读写第一册unit1TEXT B 课文及课后题

2世纪大学英语读写第一册u n i t1T E X T B课文及课后题-CAL-FENGHAI.-(YICAI)-Company One1Bittersweet MemoriesKaren Odem1 High school graduation — the bittersweet feelings are as much a part of me now as they were twenty-one years ago.2 As graduation day approached, excitement increased. Being out of high school meant I was finally coming of age. Soon I would be on my own, making my own decisions, doing what I wanted without someone looking over my shoulder and it meant going to school with boys, a welcome change coming from an all-girl high school.3 There was never any question in my mind that I would go to a college away from home. My mother's idea, on the other hand, was just the opposite. Trying her best not to force her preferences on me, she would subtly ask whether I had considered particular schools, all of which happened to be located in or near my hometown of Chicago. Once it was established that, as long as it was financially feasible, I would be going away anyway, my family's perspective changed. Their concern shifted from whether I was going away to how far. The schools I was considering on the East Coast suddenly looked much more attractive than those in California.4 But which college I would attend was just one of what seemed like a never-ending list of unknowns: What would college be like Would I be unbearably lonely not knowing anyone else who was going to the same school Would the other students like me Would I make friends easily Would I miss my family so much that I wouldn't be able to stand it And what about the work Would I be able to keep up (Being an A student in high school seemed to offer little assurance I would be able to survive college.) What if the college I selected turned out to be a horrible mistake Would I be able to transfer to another school5 Then panic set in. My feelings took a 180-degree turn. I really didn't want to leave high school at all, and it was questionable whether I wanted to grow up after all. It had been nice being respected as a senior by the underclass students for the past year; I didn't enjoy the idea of being on the bottom rung of the ladder again.6 Despite months of anticipation, nothing could have prepared me for the impact of the actual day. As the familiar strains of "Pomp and Circumstance" echoed in the background, I looked around at the other figures in white caps and gowns as we solemnly filed into the auditorium. Tears welled up uncontrollably in my eyes, and I was consumed by a rush of sadness. As if in a daze, I rose from my seat when I heard my name called and slowly crossed the stage to receive my diploma. As I reached out my hand, I knew that I was reaching not just for a piece of paper but for a brand-new life. Exciting as the prospect of a new life seemed, it wasn't easy saying good-bye to the old one, the familiar faces, the familiar routine. I would even miss that chemistry class I wasn't particularly fond of and the long commute each day between home and school that I abhorred. Good or bad, it was what I knew.7 That September, I was fortunate to attend a wonderful university in Providence, Rhode Island. I needn't have worried about liking it. My years thereturned out to be some of the best years of my life. And as for friends, some of the friendships I formed there I still treasure today.8 Years later, financial difficulties forced my high school to close its doors for good. Although going back is impossible, it's comforting to know I can revisit my special memories any time.A. Read the following statements carefully. Some of them are true, some are not. Write T or F in the space before each statement without turning back to the text.1.In spite of the passage of time, the author’s mixed feelings about her high school graduation have been kept alive.2. With graduation day drawing near, she was getting more and more excited.3. Young Karen Odom was looking forward to entering a college away from home and living a life totally on her own.4. Her parents, on the other hand, insisted that she go to a college or university located in or near her hometown.5. For no good reason at all, her excitement suddenly changed into anxiety and fear.6. On the actual graduation day, she was overcome by a sudden rush of sorrow.7. After graduation from high school, Karen had a wonderful time at a good university in the East.8. Although her high school was closed down years later Karen felt comfortedbecause she thought she could revisit her alma mater (母校) in her mind any time.B. TEXT COMPREHENSION1. In this article the author mainly describes _____.A) the height of excitement during the months leading up to the big event — the graduation ceremonyB) her eagerness to go to a wonderful university far away from homeC) her mixed feelings during the months leading towards graduation and on the actual graduation dayD) her happiness to be admitted to a wonderful university where she spent some of the best years of her life2. To the author, high school graduation meant _____.A) she would become legally an adultB) she could stop taking boring chemistry classesC) she could start to enjoy an independent lifeD) all of the above3. The author's mother _____.A) did not care very much which college her daughter went toB) willingly allowed her to go to a college of her own choiceC) wished that she would study at a college or university close to homeD) was greatly disappointed when she decided to go to a college on the East Coast4. The clause “as long as it was financially feasible” (para. 3) could best be replaced by _____.A) if the expenses would not be too heavy a burden on the family budgetB) if the tuition and living expenses were not too highC) if financial aid of any sort was availableD) if the family could put up enough money to pay for the tuition5. Anticipation and excitement suddenly changed into anxiety and fear. Which of the following did the author NOT include as a reason for that change?A) The fact that she was a top student at high school did not necessarily mean that she was sure to enjoy a successful academic career in college.B) It might be hard for her to make friends under new circumstances.C) She might make a wrong choice and enter a university she did not like at all.D) Growing homesick might seriously affect her academic performance at college.6. “Being on the bottom rung of the ladder” (para. 5) means_____.A) “being a freshman — at the lowest level of an institution of higher learning”B) “being unpopular among her fellow students”C) “being looked down upon by the juniors and seniors”D) all of the above7. On the actual graduation day, _____.A) the familiar tune “Pomp and Circumstance” brought tears to her eyesB) when she reached out for her diploma, she knew clearly that open to her was a new stage in life, unknown and insecureC) she came to realize that she was so attached to her old schoolD) she went through the whole ceremony in a daze8. The author adopts _____ tone in writing this article.A) a seriousB) an emotionalC) a matter-of-factD) an exaggeratedC. VOCABULARY。

新编大学英语第一册unit Text B Advertising The Selling of a Produc

新编大学英语第一册unit Text B Advertising The Selling of a Produc

Advertising: The Selling of a Product1 A consumer walks into a store. He stands in front of hundreds of boxes of laundry detergent. He chooses one brand, pays for it, and leaves. Why does he pick that specific kind of soap? Is it truly better than the others? Probably not. These days, many products are nearly identical to each other in quality and price. If products are almost the same, what makes consumers buy one brand instead of another? Although we might not like to admit it, commercials on television and advertisements in magazines probably influence us much more than we think they do.2 Advertising informs consumers about new products available on the market. It gives us information about everything from shampoo to toothpaste to computers and cars. But there is one serious problem with this. The "information" is actually very often "misinformation." It tells us the products' benefits but hides their disadvantages. Advertising not only leads us to buy things that we don't need and can't afford, but it also confuses our sense of reality. "Zoom toothpaste prevents cavities and gives you white teeth!" the advertisement tells us. But it doesn't tell us the complete truth: that a healthy diet and a good toothbrush will have the same effect.3 Advertisers use many methods to get us to buy their products. One of their most successful methods is to make us feel dissatisfied withourselves and our imperfect lives. Advertisements show us who we are not and what we do not have. Our teeth aren't white enough. Our hair isn't shiny enough. Our clothes aren't clean enough. Advertisements make us afraid that people won't like us if we don't use the advertised products. "Why don't I have any dates?" a good-looking girl sadly asks in a commercial. "Here," replies her roommate, "try Zoom toothpaste!" Of course she tries it, and immediately the whole football team falls in love with her. "That's a stupid commercial," we might say. But we still buy Zoom toothpaste out of fear of being unpopular and having no friends.4 If fear is the negative motive for buying a product, then wanting a good self-image is the positive reason for choosing it. Each of us has a mental picture of the kind of person we would like to be. For example, a modern young woman might like to think that she looks like a beautiful movie star. A middle-aged man might want to see himself as a strong, attractive athlete. Advertisers know this. They write specific ads to make certain groups of people choose their product. Two people may choose different brands of toothpaste with the identical price, amount, and quality。

新视野大学英语 Unit1 sectionB

新视野大学英语 Unit1 sectionB
Example
Desalination, or the removal of salt from seawater, is a method of providing fresh water for business, home, and agricultural use. “The removal of salt from seawater” is the definition of “desalination”.
to be continued


Practice
课文
自测
NHCE
There are other ways to help you find out word meanings in context. Please try and use the skills in your reading.


Practice
This practice is designed to help you get a deeper insight into the skill for this unit.
NHCE
课文
自测
Finding out Word Meanings
Hi, everyone. We’ve come to Section B. This section deals with Reading Skills wherein we will introduce several important reading skills one by one. You should take care to read the explanation of each specific skill, which has been written in clear, easy-to-understand words. And through Reading Passage B we will let you see how each skill is applied to a particular passage.

大学英语Unit1-SectionB

大学英语Unit1-SectionB

Background of the article
The article was written by a psychologist who has extensive experience in helping individuals overcome challenges in their lives.
Reading
04 comprehension and question answering
Reading comprehension questions
Main Idea Questions
These questions ask about the overall theme or central idea of the passage.
05 Writing skills and exercises
Writing Skills Sharing
Paragraph Development
介绍段落发展的基本技巧, 如主题句、支持句和结论句 的使用,以及如何通过逻辑 和连贯性来构建段落。
Vocabulary and Grammar
分享一些常用的高级词汇和 复杂的语法结构,以及如何 在写作中正确使用它们,以 提高文本的准确性和流畅性 。
02 03
Multiple choice
Exercises with multiple choice questions testing students' understanding of different grammar points are provided.
Sentence correction
Failure to use the correct form of the verb

第三版新视野大学英语Unit1SectionB ppt课件

第三版新视野大学英语Unit1SectionB ppt课件

What topics may be discussed in more details in the text?
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Previewing skills
Read the title and subtitles if there are any.
The title often gives you the topic or subject of the article. As you read the title,
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Previewing skills
Read the first paragraph.
It often tells the main idea of the article. As you read the 1st paragraph, continue
thinking about the material and ask yourself, “Does the first paragraph give me any specific information about the article?” “Can I figure out the central idea of this article from the 1st paragraph?”
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Previewing skills
Read the last paragraph.
It usually provides the summary of the article and leaves the reader with some thoughts on the topic. As you read it, ask

大学综合英语1textB课文

大学综合英语1textB课文

UNIT1Summer ReadingMichael Dorris1When I was fourteen, I earned money in the summer by cutting lawns, and within a few weeks I had built upa body of customers. I got to know people by the flowers they planted that I had to remember not to cut down, by the things they lost in the grass or stuck in the ground on purpose. I reached the point with most of t hem when I knew in advance what complaint was about to be spoken, which particular request was most im portant. (1) And I learned something about the measure of my neighbors by their preferred method of paym ent: by the job, by the month ─ or not at all.2 Mr. Ballou fell into the last category, and he always had a reason why. On one day he had no changefor a fifty, on another he was flat out of checks, on another, he was simply out when I knocked on his door. S till, except for the money part, he was a nice enough old guy, always waving or tipping his hat when he'd see me from a distance. I figured him for a thin retirement check, maybe a work-related injury that kept him fro m doing his own yard work. Sure, I kept track of the total, but I didn't worry about the amount too much. (2) Grass was grass, and the little that Mr. Ballou's property comprised didn't take long to trim.3 Then, one late afternoon in mid-July, the hottest time of the year, I was walking by his house and heopened the door, motioned me to come inside. The hall was cool, shaded, and it took my eyes a minute to a djust to the dim light.4 "I owe you," Mr. Ballou began, "but…" 5 I thought I'd save him the trouble of thinking up a new excuse. "No problem. Don't worry about it."6 "The bank made a mistake in my account," he continued, ignoring my words. "It will be cleared up in a day or two. But in the meantime I thought perhaps you could choose one or two volumes for a down pay ment."7 He gestured toward the walls and I saw that books were stacked everywhere. It was like a library, except with no order to the arrangement.8 "Take your time," Mr. Ballou encouraged. "Read, borrow, keep. Find something you like. What do you read?"9 "I don't know." And I didn't. I generally read what was in front of me, what I could get from the paperback stack at the drugstore, what I found at the library, magazines, the back of cereal boxes, comics. The id ea of consciously seeking out a special title was new to me, but, I realized, not without appeal ─ so I started to look through the piles of books.10 "You actually read all of these?" 11 "This isn't much," Mr. Ballou said. "This is nothing, just what I've kept, the ones worth looking at a second time."" 12 "Pick for me, then." 13 He raised his eyebrows, cocked his head, and regarded me as though measuring me for a suit. After a moment, he nodded, searched through a stack, and handed me a dark redhardbound book, fairly thick.14 "The Last of the Just," I read. "By Andre Schwarz-Bart. What's it about?" 16 I started after supper, sitting outdoors on an uncomfortable kitchen chair. (3) Within a few pages, the yard, the summer, disa ppeared, and I was plunged into the aching tragedy of the Holocaust, the extraordinary clash of good, repres ented by one decent man, and evil. Translated from French, the language was elegant, simple, impossible to resist. When the evening light finally failed I moved inside, read all through the night.- 6 - 17 To this day, thirty years later, I vividly remember the experience. It was my first voluntary enco unter with world literature, and I was stunned by the concentrated power a novel could contain. I lacked the vocabulary, however, to translate my feelings into words, so the next week, when Mr. Ballou asked, "Well?" Ionly replied, "It was good."18 "Keep it, then," he said. "Shall I suggest another?" 19 I nodded, and was presented with thepaperback edition of Margaret Mead's Coming of Age in Samoa.20 To make two long stories short, Mr. Ballou never paid me a cent for cutting his grass that year or the next, but for fifteen years I taught anthropology at Dartmouth College. (4) Summer reading was not the innocent entertainment I had assumed it to be, not a light-hearted, instantly forgettable escape in a hammock (t hough I have since enjoyed many of those, too). A book, if it arrives before you at the right moment, in the p roper season, at an interval in the daily business of things, will change the course of all that follows.UNIT2Never Let a Friend DownJim Hutchison1 "Coming to the football match this afternoon?" Bill McIntosh asked 59-year-old Royce Wedding as they drank beer at the Eureka Hotel in the Australian town of Rainbow. Royce shook his head. "I promised Mo m I'd burn off the weeds on one of our fields."2Bill, who was thin but strong, looking far less than his 79 years, peered outside at the heat. A light breeze wa s blowing from the north, making conditions perfect for the burn. But Bill felt uneasy about Royce doing the j ob alone. The farmer had a bad leg and walked with great difficulty. 3 The pair had been best of friends fo r 30 years, ever since the days when they traveled together from farm to farm in search of work. Now, living alone 12 miles east of town, Bill scraped a living hunting foxes and rabbits. Once a fortnight he went to town to buy supplies and catch up with Royce, who helped run the Wedding family's farm. "I'll give you a hand," Bi ll said.3The pair set off in Royce's car. Soon they were bumping over a sandy track to the weed-choked 120-acre field . "Fire's the only way to get rid of this stuff," said Bill as they tied an old tire to the tow bar with a 50-foot cha in. Soaking the tire with gasoline, Bill put a match to it and jumped in the car.4 5 Driving slowly from the southern edge of the field, they worked their way upwind, leaving a line of burning weeds in their wake. Half way up the field, and without warning, the car pitched violently forward, plowinginto a hidden bank of sand.6 The breeze suddenly swung around to their backs and began to gather strength. Fanned to white heat, the fire line suddenly burst into a wall of flame, heading directly toward them. "Let's get out of here!" Roy ce said.7 Desperately he tried to back the car out of the sand bank. But the wheels only spun deeper in the soft sand.8 Suddenly the fire was on them. Bill pushed open his door only to find himself flung through the air as, with a roar, the gasoline tank exploded and the car leapt three feet off the ground. When it crashed back d own Royce found himself pinned against the steering wheel, unable to move. The car's seats and roof were n ow on fire.9 Bill lay where he fell, all the breath knocked out of him. The front of his shirt, shorts, bare arms and legs were soaked in burning gasoline. Then the sight of the car in flames brought him upright with a start. "Royce!" he cried, struggling to his feet and heading for the car.10 Pulling open the door, he seized Royce's arms through the smoke. "I'm stuck," Royce said. "Get yourself away!"11 (1) The fire bit at Bill's arms, face and legs, but he tightened his grip on Royce. "I'm not leaving you here," he said.12 Now Bill dug his heels into the sand and pulled as hard as he could. Suddenly he fell backward. Royce was free and out of the car. As soon as he had dragged him away he patted out the flames on Royce's b ody and on his own legs and arms with his bare hands.13 Royce saw a second explosion rock the car, as it was eaten up by flames. I'd be ashes now if Bill hadn't gotten me out, he thought. Looking down, Royce was shocked by the extent of his injuries. His stomach a nd left hip were covered in deep burns. Worse still, his fingers were burned completely out of shape.14 Lying on his back, Bill was in equally bad shape. Pieces of blackened flesh and skin hung from his forearms, hands and legs.15 Bill looked across at his friend. Reading the despair clouding Royce's face, Bill said, "I'll get help. You hang on." Royce nodded, but as he watched Bill set off slowly across the blackened field, he wondered how his fri end was going to walk almost two miles and get over three fences.16 (2) A lifetime spent around the tough people who make their home in the Australian bush had permanently fixed into Bill's soul two principles: never give up no matter how bad the odds and never let a friend down. Now, with every step sending pain piercing through every part of his body, he drew on those twin pillars of character.(3) If I don't make it, Royce will die out there, he told himself over and over.17 "What's the matter with that dog?" said Vicky Wedding, Royce's mom, peering out her window. Startled by a noise behind her, she turned to see Bill leaning against the door.18 "Dear God, what happened?" she exclaimed, grabbing Bill as he slid down the doorframe.19 "We got caught in the fire," he whispered, barely able to speak. "Get help." Vicky sat Bill down, covered him in wet towels to ease the pain of his burns, and then picked up the phone.20 Throughout the bumpy, hour-and-a-half ride to the hospital in Horsham, neither of the two injuredmen spoke of their pain. "We should've gone to the football match," Royce said, trying to keep their spirits u p. Bill grinned weakly.21 Not long after Bill found himself at Government House being presented with the Bravery Medal forhis courageous rescue. (4) But the real highlight for Bill came six months after the fire, when Royce, just out of hospital, walked into the Eureka Hotel and bought him a beer.22 "We made it," said Royce as they raised their glasses. "Here's to the best friend a man could have."UNIT31 New Drugs Kill Cancer2 Devastation by El Niño ─ a Warning3 6:30 p.m. October 26, 2028: Could This Be the Deadline for the Apocalypse?5When these headlines appeared this year, their stories became the subjects of conversations around the wor ld ─ talks spiced with optimism and confusion. Imagine the hopes raised in the millions battling cancer. Did t he news mean these people never had to worry about cancer again? Or that we all had to worry about a cat astrophe from outer space or, more immediately, from El Niño?6 5 Unfortunately, science doesn't work that way. It rarely arrives at final answers. People battling cancer or victims of El Niño may find this frustrating, but the truth is that Nature does not yield her secrets easily. Science is done step by step. First an idea is formed. Then this is tested by an experiment. The outcome, one hopes, results in an increase in knowledge.6 Science is not a set of unquestionable results but a way of understanding the world around us. Its real work is slow. (1) The scientific method, as many of us learned in school, is a gradual process that begins wi th a purpose or a problem or question to be answered. It includes a list of materials, a procedure to follow, a set of observations to make and, finally, conclusions to reach. In medicine, when a new drug is proposed that might cure or control a disease, it is first tested on a large random group of people, and their reactions are then compared with those of another random group not given the drug. All reactions in both groups are caref ully recorded and compared, and the drug is evaluated. All of this takes time ─ and patience.7 It's the result of course, that makes the best news ─ not the years of quiet work that characterize the bulk of scientific inquiry. After an experiment is concluded or an observation is made, the result continues t o be examined critically. When it is submitted for publication, it goes to a group of the scientist's colleagues, who review the work. If the work is important enough, just before the report is published in a professional jo urnal or read at a conference, a press release is issued and an announcement is made to the world.8 The world may think that the announcement signifies the end of the process, but it doesn't. A publi cation is really a challenge: "Here is my result. Prove me wrong!" (2) Other researchers will try to repeat the experiment, and the more often it works, the better the chances that the result is sound. Einstein was right when he said: "No amount of experimentation can ever prove me right; a single experiment can at any time prove me wrong."9 In August 1996, NASA announced the discovery in Antarctica of a meteorite from Mars that might co ntain evidence of ancient life on another world. (3)As President Clinton said that day, the possibility that life existed on Mars billions of years ago was potentially one of the great discoveries of our time.10 After the excitement wore down and initial papers were published, other researchers began looking at samples from the same meteorite. (4) Some concluded that the "evidence of life" was mostly contamina tion from Antarctic ice or that there was nothing organic at all in the rock.11 Was this a failure of science, as some news reports trumpeted?12 No! It was a good example of the scientific method working the way it is supposed to. Scientists sp end years on research, announce their findings, and these findings are examined by other scientists. That's h ow we learn. Like climbing a mountain, we struggle up three feet and fall back two. It's a process filled with d isappointments and reverses, but somehow we keep moving ahead.UNIT4Ben Carson: Man of MiraclesChristopher Phillips1 Ben Carson looked out at Detroit's Southwestern High School class of 1988. It was graduation day. A t 36, Carson was a leading brain surgeon, performing delicate and lifesaving operations. But 19 years before, he had graduated from this same inner-city school. He remembered it all ─ the depressing surroundings of one of Detroit's toughest, poorest neighborhoods. And he knew the sense of hopelessness and despair that many of these 260 students were feeling about the future.2 (1) For weeks he had worried over how to convince the graduates that they, too, could succeed agai nst seemingly impossible odds, that they could move mountains. Now, standing to deliver the main address, he held up his hands. "See these?"he asked the students. "I didn't always use them for surgery. When I was a little younger than you are, I often waved a knife with them to threaten people. And I even tried to kill some body."3 The students stared in disbelief.4 Ben and his older brother, Curtis, grew up in a crowded apartment building near the school. Their m other, Sonya, who had married at age 13 and divorced when Ben was eight, worked at two and sometimes th ree low-paying jobs at a time. She wanted a better life for her two sons and showered them with encourage ment. However, both boys started badly in school, especially Ben.5 Sonya recognized that Ben was bright. He just didn't seem motivated. "From now on,"she announced one afternoon, "you can watch only two TV shows a week. You have to read at least two books every week and give me reports so I know you really read them."6 At first Ben hated reading. Then, gradually, he discovered a new world of possibility. (2) Before long he was reading more books than his determined mother required, and he couldn't wait to share them with her.7 His mother studied the book reports closely. "That's a fine job, Bennie," she would tell her beamingson. What she didn't tell Ben or Curtis was that, with only a third-grade education, she couldn't read. 7"Mom," Ben announced one day, "When I grow up, I want to be a doctor."9 Sonya Carson smiled, knowing Ben must have just read a book on doctors. "You can be anything you wantto be," she assured him.10 With a goal now, young Ben soared from the bottom of his class toward the top. His teachers wereastonished. There was one thing, however, that Ben couldn't seem to conquer: his violent temper. (3) He boil ed with anger ─ anger at his departed father, anger at the hardships his mother faced, anger at all the wasted lives he saw around him.11 Then one afternoon, walking home from school, 14-year-old Ben started arguing with a friend. Pulling a camping knife, Ben thrust at the boy. The steel blade struck the youngster's metal belt buckle, and the b lade snapped. Ben's friend fled.12 Ben stood stone-still. "I almost killed someone!" he said quietly. There and then he made a decision. If he was ever going to fulfill his dream of becoming a doctor and save others, he was first going to have to cure himself. Never again would he let his anger run away with him.13 In 1969 Ben graduated third in his class from Southwestern High and received a full scholarship to Yale. After Yale he obtained grants to study at the University of Michigan Medical School. This was the start ofa career that was to lead him, at age 33, to be appointed senior brain surgeon at Johns Hopkins hospital. From around the world, other surgeons came to seek his counsel.14 In April 1987 a German doctor arrived with the records of Siamese twins, newborns Patrick and Benjamin Binder. The boys had separate brains, but at the back of the heads, where they were joined, they shar ed blood vessels. Their mother refused to sacrifice either child to save the other. Surgeons knew of no other way to proceed. In many cases, when Siamese twins are separated at the back of the head, one child survive s and the other either dies or suffers severe mental injury.15 Carson came up with a plan to give both twins the best chance of survival: stop their hearts, drain their blood supply completely and restore circulation only after the two were safely separated.16 The entire operation took 22 hours and required a 70-person team. After the twins' hearts were stopped and their blood drained, Carson had only one hour to separate the damaged blood vessels. He worked smoothly and quickly, easing his instruments deep into the brains of the two infants. Twenty minutes afterstopping the twins' circulation, he made the final cut. Now, working with his team, he had 40 minutes to rec onstruct the blood vessels that had been cut open and close Patrick's head. Another team would do the same for Benjamin.17 Just within the hour limit, the babies were fully separated, and the operating tables were wheeledapart.18 Tired but happy, Dr. Carson went out to the waiting room. "Which one of your children would you like to see first?" he asked their mother.19 The students of Detroit's Southwestern High sat silently as Ben Carson described his life's journey from an angry street fighter to an internationally distinguished brain surgeon. "It's important that you know th ere are many ways to go," Dr. Carson told them. "Becoming a brain surgeon is perfectly possible. But you don 't have to be a surgeon. There are opportunities everywhere. You just have to be willing to take advantage of them. (4) Think big! Nobody was born to be a failure. If you feel you're going to succeed ─ and work your tail off ─ you will succeed!"20 Pausing, Ben Carson turned to his mother who was sitting in the front row.21 "I'd like to thank my mother," Carson said in closing, "for all the success I've had."22 Southwestern High's entire graduating class stood and clapped for a solid five minutes. Tears welled in Ben Carson's eyes.23 Afterward, Sonya Carson embraced her son fondly. "It's really true, Bennie," she said. "You can be anything you want to be. And you've done it!"UNIT5The WalletArnold Fine1 It was a year ago today when I came across a wallet in the street. (1) Inside was a letter that looked as if it had been carried around for years, dated 1924. The envelope was worn and all I could make out was t he return address. I opened the letter carefully, hoping for some clue to the identity of the owner of the wall et.2 It was signed Hannah and written to someone called Michael. She wrote that she could not see him any more because her mother forbade it. She would always love him, but felt it would be best if they never met again.3 It was a beautiful letter. (2)But there was no way, other than the name Michael, that the owner could be identified.4 The return address was nearby, so I called in. I asked if anyone there knew of a Hannah, and was tol d, "Oh, of course! We bought this house from her some time ago. She's in a nursing home now."5 They gave me the name of the home and I called the director. (3)I explained the situation and was in vited over, arriving to find him chatting to the door guard. We exchanged greetings and the director took me up to Hannah's room on the third floor of the large building.6 She was a sweet, silver-haired old lady with a warm smile, full of life. I told her about finding the wal let and took out the letter. The moment she saw it she recognized it. "Young man," she said, "this letter was t he last contact I had with Michael. I never heard from him again." She looked away for a moment in deep th ought and continued, "I loved him very much. I was 16 at the time and my mother felt I was much too young to even be seeing Michael. He was so handsome."7 Just then the director was called away and we were left alone. "Yes, Michael Goldstein was his name ," she began once more. "If you do find him, give him my regards and tell him I still think of him often. That... " She hesitated for a moment, took a deep breath, and added, "I still love him. You know..." she said, smiling through her tears, "I never did marry. I guess no one ever matched up to Michael."8 At that moment the director returned. I thanked her and said goodbye. Downstairs the guard at the front door looked at me and asked, "Any luck? Was the old lady able to help you?"9 I told him she had given me a lead." But I think I'll let this go for a while. I spent almost a whole day t rying to find the owner of this wallet."10 I took it out and showed it to the guard.11 The guard took one look and said," (4)Hey, wait a minute. That's Mr. Goldstein's wallet. I'd know th at anywhere. He's always losing it."12 "Who's Mr. Goldstein?" I pressed him as my hand started to shake.13 "He's one of the old guys on the eighth floor. That's Mike Goldstein's wallet for sure. I'll take you up to him, if you like."14 We found Mr. Goldstein in his room and the security man asked if he had lost his wallet.15 Mr. Goldstein put his hand to his back pocket and, realizing it was empty, said, "Oh, my goodness. It is missing."16 "Could this be yours?" I asked, handing him the wallet.17 The second he saw it he smiled with relief and said, "Yes... yes... that's it. Thank you so much."18 "Not at all," I replied. "But I have to tell you something. I read the letter."19 The smile on his face disappeared. "You read the letter?"20 "Not only did I read it, I know where Hannah is."21 The blood left his face as he suddenly grew pale.22 "Hannah? You know where she is? How is she? Is she still as pretty as she was?"23 The security man looked at me suggesting that I not say any more.24 I hesitated.25 "Please! Please tell me!" he begged.26 "She's fine... just as pretty as when you knew her," I said softly.27 "Could you tell me where she is?" He grabbed my hand and said, "You know something... I was so i n love with that girl that when that letter came, my life seemed to come to an end. I never married. I guess I'l l always love her. Oh, she was beautiful... and so sweet." He smiled to himself.28 "Michael," I said. "Come with me."29 The three of us took the elevator down to the third floor. Hannah was sitting alone watching televis ion.30 "Hannah," the guard said softly. "Do you know this man?" She adjusted her glasses. She looked fora moment but didn't say a word.31 "Hannah, it's Michael. Do you remember me?"32 "Michael? I don't believe it! Michael? It's you! Michael!"33 He walked slowly to her side. Michael took her around the waist and she held him tight, whispering , "Michael... my darling Michael..."34 The two of them sat down on a sofa, holding hands, and started to talk. They had some sixty years' worth to catch up on. The guard and I walked out, both of us crying.35 Three weeks later I got a call from the director: "You're invited to a wedding. Michael and Hannah a re finally going to tie the knot! You know, the two of them were in this building for years and they never met, or if they did they didn't recognize each other."36 Hannah wore a light brown dress for the wedding and looked beautiful. Michael wore a dark blue s uit and stood erect, like a soldier. The hospital gave them a special room together, and if you ever wanted to see a 79-year-old bride and an 81-year-old groom acting like two teenagers, you had to see this couple.UNIT6Do Animals Fall in Love?Jeffery Moussaieff Masson and Susan McCarthy1 Humans believe they know what love is, and value it highly. Yet many who study animal behavior are cautious about saying animals experience love, preferring to say they are not displaying "true love" but sim ply following the dictates of their genes.2 Is it really as simple as all that? What about the animals who stay together until one dies? Evolutionary bi ologists often say that pairing is a way to ensure adequate parental care, but it's not always clear this is the c ase. Some animals continue to accompany each other when not raising young. And they appear to exhibit so rrow or show a sense of loss when one of the pair dies.3 Konrad Lorenz, studying the behavior of geese, describes a typical example. Ado's mate, Susanne-Eli sabeth, was killed by a fox. He stood silently by her partly eaten body, which lay across their nest. In the follo wing days, he hung his head and his eyes became vacant. Because he did not have the heart to defend himse lf from the attacks of the other geese, his status in the flock fell sharply. A year went by. Finally Ado pulled hi mself together and found another mate.4 Animals may fall in love dramatically. According to Lorenz two geese are most likely to "fall in love" when they have known each other as youngsters, been separated and then meet again. (1) He compared this to a man who meets a woman and ─ astonished that she is the same girl he used to see running around in a school uniform ─ falls in love and marries her. According to parrot specialist Sue Athan, it is common for s ome parrots to fall in love at first sight.5 Instinct may urge animals to love, but it does not say whom they will love. Seeking a mate for a male parrot, Athan purchased a fine-feathered young female and introduced the two birds. To Athan's disappoint ment, "the male nevertheless acted like the female wasn't even in the room."6 A few months later Athan was given an older female in extremely poor condition. "She didn't have a feather from the neck down," she says. "Her feet were all twisted. She had lines around her eyes. And yet th e male thought she was the love of his life." The two birds immediately paired off and eventually produced y oung.7 (2) Zookeepers know, to their despair, that many species of animals will not breed with just any othe r animal of their species. Timmy, a gorilla in the Cleveland Zoo, declined to mate with two female gorillas intr oduced to him. But when he met a gorilla named Kate, they took to each other at once. When it was thought that Kate was unable to reproduce, because of her advanced age, zookeepers decided to send Timmy to ano ther zoo, where he might have a chance to breed successfully.8 Defending the zoo's decision to separate the animals, the zoo director said, "It sickens me when peo ple start to put human emotions in animals. We can't think of them as some kind of magnificent human bein g: they are animals. When people start saying animals have emotions, they cross the bridge of reality." Jane Goodall, whose work has shed light on the emotional life of chimpanzees, also writes, (3) I cannot think of ch impanzees developing emotions, one for the other, comparable in any way to the tenderness, protectiveness , tolerance and spiritual joy that are the mark of human love in its truest and deepest sense."9 Yet there is evidence of love in the devotion that members of pairs heap on each other. Geese, swan s and mandarin ducks are all symbols of marital faithfulness; field biologists tell us this is true to life. Coyotes , often thought of as representing trickery, would make equally good symbols of devotion, since they also for m lasting pairs. Observations indicate that they begin to form pair attachments before they are sexually active.10 In his study of coyotes, Hope Ryden tells how pairs can be observed curling up together, hunting mi ce together, and greeting each other with elaborate displays. Ryden describes two coyotes mating. Afterwar d, the female tapped the male with her paw and licked his face. Then they curled up to sleep. This looks a lot like romantic love. Whatever distinctions may be made between the love of two people and the love of two animals, the essence frequently seems the same.11 An animal raised by another species will often show affection for a member of that species when i t grows up. Gavin Maxwell tells of an otter called Tibby, who was raised by a man who lived on an island off t he coast of Scotland and who got around with the help of a walking stick. When he became seriously ill, he t ook Tibby to Maxwell and asked him to look after the otter. The man died not long after.12 Tibby made a habit of escaping and visiting the nearest village. There she found a man who used a walking stick. She tried to build a nest under his house, but he chased her away.。

大学英语新起点教材第一册 Unit 1 Text B how to study English 2

大学英语新起点教材第一册 Unit 1 Text B how to study English 2

determination
1.
the quality that makes you continue trying to do something even when this is difficult 决心;果断;坚定 决心;果断;
e.g. He fought the illness with courage and determination. They had survived by fierce determination.
ቤተ መጻሕፍቲ ባይዱ
Paragraph 4
Every day you need to take a walk or play basketball or sing a song or do something you find relaxing. Every now and then you need to go out with your friends, see a movie, or go to a concert. When you return to your studies, your mind will be refreshed and you’ll learn more.
fellow
n. a person that you work with or that is like you; a thing that is similar to the one mentioned 同事;同辈;同类;配对物 同事;同辈;同类; e.g. She has a very good reputation among her fellows. adj. used to describe somebody who is the same as you in some way, or in the same situation 同类的;同事的;同伴的;同情况的 同类的;同事的;同伴的; e.g. fellow members/citizens/workers/students

21世纪大学英语英语课文讲解unit1( B )

21世纪大学英语英语课文讲解unit1( B  )

Text B Little Sister of the Poor1.Mother Teresa (1910~1997)Mother Teresa, a Roman Catholic nun, was born to Albanian parents in Yugoslavia. She is known as “the Saint of the Gutters” for bringing comfort and dignity to the destitute贫穷的. She founded an order (Missionaries of Charity) which is noted for its work among the poor and the dying in Calcutta, India, and throughout the world. Mother Teresa was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in 1979.2. Roman Catholic ChurchThe Roman Catholic Church, also called the Catholic Church or the Church of Rome, is the Christian Church with administrative headquarters in the Vatican, of which the pope, or the Bishop of Rome is the supreme head.3.John Paul II (1920~)John Paul II is the first non-Italian Polish Pope in the history of the Roman Catholic church. He was elected pope on Oct. 16, 1978. John Paul II is a conservative pope who firmly holds traditional Catholic views.4. ChernobylThe world’s worst nuclear-reactor accident occurred at the Chernobyl (Ukraine) nuclear power plant on Apr. 26, 1986. The accident caused the immediate death of 31 people, while many others suffered radioactive contamination污染.6. the Nobel PrizeAny of the prizes (five in number until 1969, when a sixth was added) that are awarded annually by four institutions (three Swedish and one Norwegian) from a fund established under the will of Alfred Bernhard Nobel. Distribution was begun on Dec. 10, 1901, the fifth anniversary of the death of the founder, whose will specified that the awards should annually be made “to those who, during the preceding year, shall have conferred the greatest benefit on mankind.” The five prizes established by his will are: the Nobel Prize for Physics; the Nobel Prize for Chemistry; the Nobel Prize for Physiology or Medicine; the Nobel Prize for Literature; and the Nobel Prize for Peace. An additional award, the Prize for Economic Sciences in Memory of Alfred Nobel, was set up in 1968 by the Bank of Sweden, and the first award was given in 1969.Text Analysis:Part I (Para 1-3) death of the Mother Teresa and the public response1.(para.1) Mother Teresa served the dying and desperate all over the world.2.(para.2) Mother Teresa died of illness and many people felt personal grief over her death.3.(para.3) Mother Teresa was regarded as a living saint and what she did transcended the boundaries of religion and nationality.Part II(para.4~8) The development of Mother Teresa’s cause and countless acts of mercy Part III(para.9~11) Mother Teresa gained fame and honor as well as criticism. Her act will be remembered by people.Words & Expressions:1. Hospitalize vt. (usu. pass.) put (a person) into hospital [常被动] 送…进医院治疗He hospitalizes patients for minor ailments. 他把只有小病的患者也送进医院。

新标准大学英语综合教程Book 1 unit1 text B 教案 - 副本

新标准大学英语综合教程Book 1 unit1 text B 教案 - 副本
What do you think“Tis”means in the title of this memoir?
二.Navigation
1.Text organisation
2.Text exploration
3.Text evaluation
三.Destination
四.Resources
1.Difficult sentences
4.Resources
新进展内容
Go over “Reading across culture” and “Guided writing” for some clue.
课堂效果评价与反思
西南医科大学教案续页
教学过程(▲重点内容;◆难点内容)
教学内容
教学形式和教学方法
教学
要求
时间分配
一.Embarkation
五.Autonomous learning tasks自主学习任务
讲授法
演示法(运用幻灯)
互动法
举例法
演示法(运用幻灯、图片)
举例法
互动法
演示法(运用幻灯、图片)
互动法
小组讨论,课堂呈现
讲授,互动,呈现
讨论,互动,呈现
讲授,互动
讲授
举例
练习,讲授
呈现
▲重点内容
◆难点内容
▲重点内容
◆难点内容
重点
重难点
教研室主任签名:
2019年8月21日
3.practiceprediction.
4.enhance the interest in English learning.
5.enrichtheknowledge about westernculture.

全新版大学英语视听阅读Unit 1 Text B

全新版大学英语视听阅读Unit 1 Text B

yell: vi. say, shout, or cry loudly Kids were pushing past me down the corridor, all shouting and yelling to each other. 很抱歉,昨晚我对你大喊大叫。 I’m sorry I yelled at you last night.
participate in: become involved in I’d like to thank everyone who has participated in tonight’s show. 学生们期待他们的老师能参加毕业典礼。 The students expected their professors to participate in the graduation ceremony.
plus:
1. adj. more than the amount or number indicated
He works 10 hours a day plus. 这些车售价不低于一万五千美元。 Those cars cost $15,000 plus. 2. prep. added to
The jacket costs $49.95 plus tax.
肖恩(Sean)参加竞争但不抱太大成功的希望。 Sean entered the competition without much expectation of success.
significance: n. meaning; importance (followed by of / for / to) The discovery of the new drug is of great significance for / to people suffering from heart problems. 直到后来,我们才意识到他话里的意义。 Only later did we realize the true significance of his remark.

新视野大学英语unit1-4课translationtaxta翻译

新视野大学英语unit1-4课translationtaxta翻译

Unit1苏格拉底是古希腊哲学家,被誉为现代西方哲学的奠基人。

他是一个谜一般的人物,人们主要通过后来的一些古典作家的叙述,尤其是他最著名的学生柏拉图的作品去了解他。

苏格拉底以他对伦理学的贡献而闻名。

他的教学法亦称为苏格拉底法,即通过提问和回答来激发批判性思维以及阐述观点。

该方法在各种讨论中仍被普遍使用。

他还在认识论和逻辑领域作出了重大而深远的贡献。

他的思想和方法所带来的影响一直是后来的西方哲学的坚实基础。

苏格拉底是古代哲学史上最丰富多彩的人物。

他在他那个时代已威名远扬。

虽然他未曾建立什么哲学体系,未曾设立什么学派,也未曾创立什么宗派,但他的名字很快就变得家喻户晓了。

Confucius was a great thinker and educator in Chinese history. He was the founder of Confucianism and was respectfully referred to as an ancient "sage". His words and life story were recorded in The Analects. An enduring classic of ancient Chinese culture, The Analects has had a great influence on the thinkers, writers, and statesmen that came after Confucius. Without studying this book, one could hardly truly understand the thousands-of-years traditional Chinese culture. Much of Confucius' thought, especially his thought on education, has had a profound influence on Chinese society. In the 21st century,Confucian thought not only retains the attention of the Chinese, but it also wins an increasing attention from the international community.Unit2Structured writingParents may get disappointed when you fail to meet their expectations. They may strongly object to your lifestyle and complain that you are wasting time on unimportant things. To solve this problem, you may try to make them understand that you are a responsible person. First tell them that you have inherited many of their merits. Then remind them that you have your own thoughts and life goals as an individual. You can also explain how your lifestyle will help you in a positive way. You may not be able to change your parents’ opinions overnight, but if you keep trying, it will eventually work.英译汉圣诞节是一个被广泛庆祝的文化节日,全世界有许许多多的人在12月25日庆祝这一节日。

21世纪大学行业实用英语综合教程1单元TextB翻译

21世纪大学行业实用英语综合教程1单元TextB翻译

21世纪大学行业实用英语综合教程1单元TextB翻译Text BSWOT Analysis—The First Step of Success inMarketingThe marketing plan is one of the most important outputs of the marketing process.It relies very heavily on an analysis of the product situation. The SWOT analysis is an analytical tool which is used in market planning. The analysis of the strengths and weaknesses focuses on internal factors which can allow the organization to determine what it does well and what it needs to improve. Opportunities and threats are external factors.Strengths capture the positive aspects internal to your business that add value or offer you a competitive advantage. This is an opportunity to remind yourself of the value existing within your business. Identifying your strengths will help you decide on which areas you can rely.You are likely to see better returns for your effort in these areas.A SWOT——strength could be;Your specialist marketing expertise;A new,innovative product or service;Location of business;Quality processes and procedures;Any other aspect of your business that adds value to your product or service.Weaknesses refer to any limitation that a company might face in marketing strategy development or implementation.Weaknesses should also be examined from the customers’perspective since the customers often identify weakness will tell you which areas need special attention—thusturning them into strengths.Alternatively,you might decide that these are areas which you should avoid.A SWOT weakness could be:Lack of marketing expertise;Undifferentiated products or services(i.e. Relation to your competitors).Location of your business;Poor quality goods or services;Damaged reputation.Opportunities refer to favorable conditions in the environment that could produce rewards for a company if acted upon properly.Opportunities are areas which the business needs to attack:they offer earning potential.You will need a strategy that allows you to make the most of the opportunity which exists.A SWOT opportunity could be:A developing market such as the Internet;Mergers,joint ventures or strategic alliances;Moving into new market segments that offer improved profits;A new international market;A market vacated by an ineffective competitor.Threats are external factors beyond your control that could place your marketing strategy,or the business itself,at rise.Identifying threats allows you to take actions if they should occur,before they can affect your business negatively.These challenges are unfavorable economic trends that could lead to reduced revenues or /doc/424457761.html,petition,whether existing or potential,is always a threat.Your existing competitors can make moves that can undermine your business Other threatscould be government regulations,changes in customer behavior that reduces sales,or new technology that reduces the demand for current products or services.A SWOT threat could be:A new competitor in your home market;Price wars with competitors;A competitors have superior access to channels of distribution;Taxation is introduced on your product or service.Now,let’s look at the SWOT analysis of Starbucks Corporation:StrengthsStarbucks Corporation for fine products and services.It has almost18,000 cafes in almost 60 countries.Starbucks has been on the list of The World’s Most Ethical(WME)Companies for six years till 2012.The company is a respected employer that values its workforce.The organization has strong ethical values and an ethical mission statement as follows,”Starbucks is committed to a role of environmental leadership in all facets of our business.”WeaknessesStarbucks has a reputation for new product development and creativity. However,they remain vulnerable to the possibility that their innovation may falter over time.The organization has a strong presence in the United States of America with more than three quarters of their cafes located in the home market.It is often argued that they need to look gor a portfolio of main competitive advantage,the retail of coffee.This could make them slow to diversify into other sectors if the need should arise.OpportunitiesStarbucks are very good at taking advantage of opportunities.New products and services can be retailed in their cafes,such as Fair Trade products.The company has the opportunity to expand its global operations. New markets for coffee such as India and the Pacific Rim nations are beginning to emerge.Co-branding with other manufacturers of food and drink,and brand franchising to manufacturers of other goods and services both have potential.ThreatsWho knows if the market for coffee will grow and stay in favor with customers,or whether another type of beverage or leisure activity will replace coffee and dairy products.Since its conception in Pike Place Market,Seattle in 1971,Starbucks’success has lead to the market entry of many competitors and copycat brands that pose potential threats.(846 words)Adapted from:/doc/424457761.html,/swot/starbucks -swot.html;/doc/424457761.html,/wiki/SWOT_an alysis翻译:SWOT—市场营销成功的第一步市场营销计划是营销过程中最重要的产出之一。

自考英语一unit1-TextB

自考英语一unit1-TextB
2. If you don't know the local language, you will be excluded from _th_e__cu_l_tu_r_e___. 3. The author believes that learning a new language is like learning _a_n_e_w__w__a_y_ _t_o_t_h_in_k__a_n_d_a__n_ew__w__a_y_t_o_s_i_n_g_. 4._L__an_g_u_a_g_e__ is what makes us different from the animals. 5. Knowing a foreign language will set you apart and gain you _im__m_e_d_i_at_e_r_e_s_p_e_c_t __a_n_d_c_r_ed_i_b_i_li_ty__. 6. Speaking a foreign language beautifully can make you _a_t_tr_a_c_ti_v_e_.
as hard as the nether millstone 铁石心肠(像下层的磨石坚硬)
as hungry as a hunter 非常饥饿(像猎人一样饥饿)
as lively as a cricket
极活泼(像蟋蟀一样活泼)
as mad as a wet hen
非常生气(像弄湿的母鸡一样生气)
and creative sentences. There is a reason why most great 语言,这是有原因的。
writers and poets are students of many languages.

大一英语第一单元text1B翻译

大一英语第一单元text1B翻译

大一英语第一单元text1B翻译Translation:学会去读书约翰.霍尔特1 在我曾经任教的一个班上,许多孩子学习起来非常吃力,尤其是阅读。

因此我决定不惜任何代价消除他们对书籍的恐惧和厌恶心理,让他们能够多读些书,更勇于尝试。

2 开学后没多久,有一天我对孩子们说:“我要跟你们说说读书的事,也许还没有哪个老师这样对你们讲过。

今年我想要你们读许多书,但是我想要你们只需要为了寻求乐趣而读书,我不会提问题去检查你们读懂了没有。

如果你们读懂了一点儿,觉得会喜欢这本书,并愿意把它读完,这就够了。

我也不会去考你们词语的意思。

”3 “最后,”我继续说道,“你们不要觉得读一本书就得把它读完。

先读三、四十页,看看故事情节如何发展。

如果你不喜欢书中人物,或者对他们的经历不感兴趣,只管合上书,放到一边,去读另一本。

你们读的书是难还是容易、篇幅长还是篇幅短,我都不在意,只要你们喜欢就行。

另外,我会写信把我的意思告诉你们的家长,好让他们知道没有必要在家里查问或检查你们的读书情况。

”4 孩子们都愣住了,坐着不出声。

这真的是老师在说话吗?其中一个女孩,因为功课不好最近才转学到我们学校来,后来我发现她非常有趣、活泼、聪明,在我所有的学生中都算突出的。

我讲完后,她盯住我看了很久。

然后,她继续看着我,缓慢而严肃地问:“霍尔特先生,你说的话是真的吗?”我也同样严肃地回答:“真的,一点不假。

”5 显然,她打算照我说的办。

她读的第一本书是瑟斯博士写的《格林奇偷走圣诞节》,这本书对大多数三年级的学生都不算难,更不要说这个年级的孩子了。

有一阵子,她读的都是这个难易度的书。

也许她是在消除对阅读的一些困惑,而以前她没时间去做,因为老师总是催促她看这个年级“该看的书”。

她在这个班上学习了大概六周后,我们成了好朋友。

我试探地向她建议:既然她喜欢马,而且骑马的水平还不错,她可以读一读《玉女神驹》。

我尽可能委婉地提出这个建议。

我只告诉她那是一个关于一个热爱马并常常骑马的女孩的故事;如果她不喜欢读,她可以放回去。

大学英语第1单元TAXTATEXTB.doc

大学英语第1单元TAXTATEXTB.doc

When we are writing we are often told to keep our readers in mind, to shape what we say to fit their tastes and interests. But there is one reader in particular who should not be forgottcn. Can you guess who? Russell Baker surprised himself and everyone else when he discovered the answer.Writing for MyselfRussell BakerThe idea of becoming a writer had come to me off and on since my childhood in Belleville, but it wasn't until my third year in high school that the possibility took hold・ Until then I've been bored by everything associated with English courses. I found English grammar dull and difficult. 1 hated the assignments to turn out long, lifeless paragraphs that were agony for teachers to read and for me to write・When our class was assigned to Mr. Flcaglc for third-ycar English I anticipated another cheerless year in that most tedious of subjects. Mr. Fleagle had a reputation among students for dullness and inability to inspire• He was said to be very formal, rigid and hopelessly out of date. To me h e looked to be sixty or seventy and excessively prim. He wore primly severe eyeglasses, his wavy hair was primly cut and primly combed. He wore prim suits with neckties set primly against the collar buttons of his white shirts・ He had a primly pointed jaw, a primly straight nose, and a prim manner of speaking that was so correct, so gentlemanly, that he seemed a comic antique ・I prepared for an unfruitful year with M匚Fleagle and for a long time was not disappointed. Late in the year wc tackled the informal essay・ M匚Flcaglc distributed a homework sheet offering us a choice of topics. None was quite so simple-minded as H What I Did on My Summer Vacation/ but most seemed to be almost as dull・ 1 took the list home and did nothing until the night before the essay was due. Lying on the sofa, I finally faced up to the unwelcome task, took the list out of my notebook, and scanned it. The topic on which my eye stopped was "The Art of Eating Spaghetti."This title produced an extraordinary sequence of mental images・ Vivid memories came flooding back of a night in Belleville when all of us were seated around the supper table — Uncle Allen, my mother, Uncle Charlie, Doris, Uncle Hal 一and Aunt Pat served spaghetti for supper. Spaghetti was still a little known foreign dish in those days. Neither Doris nor I had ever eaten spaghetti, and none of the adults had enough experience to be good at it. All the good humor of Uncle Alien's house reawoke in my mind as I recalled the laughing arguments we had that night about the socially respectable method for moving spaghetti from plate to mouth.Suddenly I wanted to write about that, about the warmth and good feeling of it, but I wanted to put it down simply for my own joy, not for Mr. Fleagle・ It was a moment I wanted to recapture and hold for myself I wanted to relive the pleasure of that evening・ To write it as I wanted, however, would violate all the rules of formal composition Fd learned in school, and M匚Fleagle would surely give it a failing grade. Never mind. I would write something else for M匚Flcaglc after I had written this thing for myself.When I finished it the night was half gone and there was no time left to compose a proper, respectableessay for Mi: Fleagle・ There was no choice next morning but to turn in my tale of the Belleville supper. Two days passed before Mi; Flcaglc returned the graded papers, and he returned everyone's but mine. I was preparing myself for a command to report to Mr. Fleagle immediately after school for discipline when I saw him lift my paper from his desk and knock for the class's attention."Now, boys,” he said. H I want to read you an essay. This is titled, The Art of Eating Spaghetti.'"And he started to read・ My words! He was reading my words out loud to the entire class. What's more, the entire class was listening・ Listening attentively. Then somebody laughed, then the entire class was laughing, and not in contempt and ridicule, but with opcn-hcartcd enjoyment. Even M匚Fleagle stopped two or three times to hold back a small prim smile・I did my best to avoid showing pleasure, but what I was feeling was pure delight at this demonstration that my words had the power to make people laugh・ In the eleventh grade, at the eleventh hour as it were, I had discovered a calling. It was the happiest moment of my entire school career. When Mr- Fleagle finished he put the final seal on my happiness by saying, "Now that, boys, is an essay, don't you see .Its —don't you see — it r s of the very essence of the essay, don't you see・ Congratulations, Mr. Baker.”TAXTBSummer ReadingMichael Dorris When I was fourteen, I earned money in the summer by cutting lawns, and within a few weeks I had built up a body of customers. I got to know people by the flowers they planted that I had to remember not to cut down, by the things they lost in the grass or stuck in the ground on purpose・ I reached the point with most of them when I knew in advance what complaint was about to be spoken, which particular request was most important. (1) And I learned something about the measure of my neighbors by their preferred method of payment: by the job, by the month — or not at all・Mr. Ballou fell into the last category, and he always had a reason why. On one day he had no change for a fifty, on another he was flat out of checks, on another, he was simply out when I knocked on his door. Still, except for the money part, he was a nice enough old guy, always waving or tipping his hat when he'd see me from a distance・ I figured him for a thin retirement check, maybe a work-related injury that kept him from doing his own yard work. Sure, 1 kept track of the total, but I didn't worry about the amount too much. (2) Grass was grass, and the little that Mr. Ballou's property comprised didn't take long to trim・Then, one late afternoon in mid-July, the hottest time of the year, I was walking by his house and he opened the door, motioned me to come inside. The hall was cool, shaded, and it took my eyes a minute to adjust to the dim light.M I owe you/ Mr. Ballou began, "but5 I thought fd save him the trouble of thinking up a new excuse・"No problem. Don't worry about i匸”"The bank made a mistake in my account/1 he continued, ignoring my words. "It will be cleared up in a day or two. But in the meantime I thought perhaps you could choose one or two volumes for a down payment/1He gestured toward the walls and I saw that books were stacked everywhere. It was like a library, except with no order to the arrangement."Take your time/ Mr. Ballou encouraged・H Read, borrow, keep・ Find something you like. What do you read?"M I cion't know.'1 And I didn't・ I generally read what was in front of me, what I could get from the paperback stack at the drugstore, what I found at the library, magazines, the back of cereal boxes, comics. The idea of consciously seeking out a special title was new to me, but, I realized,not without appeal — so I started to look through the piles of books・n You actually read all of these?M”This isn't much/1 Mr. Ballou said. M This is nothing, just what Fve kept, the ones worth looking at a second time.1'"Pick for me, then."13 He raised his eyebrows, cocked his head, and regarded me as though measuring me for a suit. After amoment, he nodded, searched through a stack, and handed me a dark red hardbound book, fairly thick・"The Last of the Just," I read. "By Andre Schwarz-Bart. What's it about?""You tell me," he said. "Next week."I started after supper, sitting outdoors on an uncomfortable kitchen chair. (3) Within a few pages, the yard, the summer, disappeared, and I was plunged into the aching tragedy of the Holocaust, the extraordinary clash of good, represented by one decent man, and evil・Translated from French, the language was elegant, simple, impossible to resist. When the evening light finally failed 1 moved inside, read all through the night.To this day, thirty years later, I vividly remember the experience. It was my first voluntary encounter with world literature, and I was stunned by the concentrated power a novel could contain. I lacked the vocabulary, however, to translate my feelings into words, so the next week, when Mr. Ballou asked, "Well?” 1 only replied, "It was good/1"Keep it, then/ he said. "Shall I suggest another?”I nodded, and was presented with the paperback edition of Margaret Meads Coming of Age in Samoa.20 To make two long stories short, M匚Ballou never paid me a cent for cutting his grass that year or thenext, but for fifteen years I taught anthropology at Dartmouth College・(4) Summer reading was not the innocent entertainment I had assumed it to be, not a light-hearted, instantly forgettable escape in a hammock (though I have since enjoyed many of those, too). A book, if it amves before you at the right moment, in the proper season, at an interval in the daily business of things, will change the course of all that follows.。

英语(一)自学教程unit1textb

英语(一)自学教程unit1textb
精品资料
New Words Practice
精品资料
New Words Practice
精品资料
Text B
Five Good Reasons to Learn a Foreign Language
• Improve your native language • Enhance your experience of travel
精品资料
Phrases and Expressions
3.get the most out of=make full use of = take full advantage of 获益最多;充分利用 If it’s not possible, take full advantage of your days off to balance your time. 如果这种情况不可能,就充分利用你的休息时间来平衡 (pínghéng)。
精品资料
New Words
3.exclude排除(páichú);排斥;拒绝接纳;逐出 Employees and their relatives were excluded from participation in the contest. 雇员及其亲属不准参赛。 to exclude immigrants from a country 不准移民入境 to exclude sb.from a position 撤销某人职务 4.relegate降低;把降低到;归入;提交 relegate to 委托给 ; 移交给 I don't believe Real Madrid will be relegated to the second division. 我认为皇家马德里队不会降为乙级队。

大学英语综合教程第一单元TEXTB讲义

大学英语综合教程第一单元TEXTB讲义

备早餐发出的声响和薄饼、香肠散发的香味中醒来。
重要短语汇总
1.at one time in or during a known but unspecified past period 曾经,一度 e.g. It seems quite possible that at one time the two continents were joined together. mute n., vi.每天乘车往返两地 e.g. It's an hour's commute to work. 3. miss out (on sth.) 缺少,未得到 e.g. We are missing out on a tremendous opportunity.
3. No one is suggesting that we go back to the 1950s. The Cleaver household was a fantasy even then, not reality. But we might borrow one important lesson from the Cleavers. It is that family life is just as important as work or play. If we agree, we'll find ways of spending more time together. We'll find things to share. And then there will be something right with the picture. 没有人说我们应该回到五十年代去。克立弗家庭即使在当 时也只是虚构而非现实。但我们或许能从这一人家获得一 个重要的借鉴,即家庭生活和工作、娱乐同样重要。如果 我们同意这一看法,我们就能设法找到更多时间聚在一起。 我们就能找到共同的兴趣。那样的话,我们家庭生活的情 景就颇为美妙了。
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When we are writing we are often told to keep our readers in mind, to shape what we say to fit their tastes and interests. But there is one reader in particular who should not be forgotten. Can you guess who? Russell Baker surprised himself and everyone else when he discovered the answer.Writing for MyselfRussell BakerThe idea of becoming a writer had come to me off and on since my childhood in Belleville, but it wasn't until my third year in high school that the possibility took hold. Until then I've been bored by everything associated with English courses. I found English grammar dull and difficult.I hated the assignments to turn out long, lifeless paragraphs that were agony for teachers to read and for me to write.When our class was assigned to Mr. Fleagle for third-year English I anticipated another cheerless year in that most tedious of subjects. Mr. Fleagle had a reputation among students for dullness and inability to inspire. He was said to be very formal, rigid and hopelessly out of date. To me he looked to be sixty or seventy and excessively prim. He wore primly severe eyeglasses, his wavy hair was primly cut and primly combed. He wore prim suits with neckties set primly against the collar buttons of his white shirts. He had a primly pointed jaw, a primly straight nose, and a prim manner of speaking that was so correct, so gentlemanly, that he seemed a comic antique.I prepared for an unfruitful year with Mr. Fleagle and for a long time was not disappointed. Late in the year we tackled the informal essay. Mr. Fleagle distributed a homework sheet offering us a choice of topics. None was quite so simple-minded as "What I Did on My Summer Vacation," but most seemed to be almost as dull. I took the list home and did nothing until the night before the essay was due. Lying on the sofa, I finally faced up to the unwelcome task, took the list out of my notebook, and scanned it. The topic on which my eye stopped was "The Art of Eating Spaghetti."This title produced an extraordinary sequence of mental images. Vivid memories came flooding back of a night in Belleville when all of us were seated around the supper table ─Uncle Allen, my mother, Uncle Charlie, Doris, Uncle Hal ─and Aunt Pat served spaghetti for supper. Spaghetti was still a little known foreign dish in those days. Neither Doris nor I had ever eaten spaghetti, and none of the adults had enough experience to be good at it. All the good humor of Uncle Allen's house reawoke in my mind as I recalled the laughing arguments we had that night about the socially respectable method for moving spaghetti from plate to mouth.Suddenly I wanted to write about that, about the warmth and good feeling of it, but I wanted to put it down simply for my own joy, not for Mr. Fleagle. It was a moment I wanted to recapture and hold for myself. I wanted to relive the pleasure of that evening. To write it as I wanted,however, would violate all the rules of formal composition I'd learned in school, and Mr. Fleagle would surely give it a failing grade. Never mind. I would write something else for Mr. Fleagle after I had written this thing for myself.When I finished it the night was half gone and there was no time left to compose a proper, respectable essay for Mr. Fleagle. There was no choice next morning but to turn in my tale of the Belleville supper. Two days passed before Mr. Fleagle returned the graded papers, and he returned everyone's but mine. I was preparing myself for a command to report to Mr. Fleagle immediately after school for discipline when I saw him lift my paper from his desk and knock for the class's attention."Now, boys," he said. "I want to read you an essay. This is titled, 'The Art of Eating Spaghetti.'"And he started to read. My words! He was reading my words out loud to the entire class. What's more, the entire class was listening. Listening attentively. Then somebody laughed, then the entire class was laughing, and not in contempt and ridicule, but with open-hearted enjoyment. Even Mr. Fleagle stopped two or three times to hold back a small prim smile.I did my best to avoid showing pleasure, but what I was feeling was pure delight at this demonstration that my words had the power to make people laugh. In the eleventh grade, at the eleventh hour as it were, I had discovered a calling. It was the happiest moment of my entire school career. When Mr. Fleagle finished he put the final seal on my happiness by saying, "Now that, boys, is an essay, don't you see. It's ─don't you see ─it's of the very essence of the essay, don't you see. Congratulations, Mr. Baker."TAXT BSummer ReadingMichael Dorris When I was fourteen, I earned money in the summer by cutting lawns, and within a few weeks I had built up a body of customers. I got to know people by the flowers they planted that I had to remember not to cut down, by the things they lost in the grass or stuck in the ground on purpose. I reached the point with most of them when I knew in advance what complaint was about to be spoken, which particular request was most important. (1) And I learned something about the measure of my neighbors by their preferred method of payment: by the job, by the month ─or not at all.Mr. Ballou fell into the last category, and he always had a reason why. On one day he had no change for a fifty, on another he was flat out of checks, on another, he was simply out when I knocked on his door. Still, except for the money part, he was a nice enough old guy, always waving or tipping his hat when he'd see me from a distance. I figured him for a thin retirement check, maybe a work-related injury that kept him from doing his own yard work. Sure, I kept track of the total, but I didn't worry about the amount too much. (2) Grass was grass, and the little that Mr. Ballou's property comprised didn't take long to trim.Then, one late afternoon in mid-July, the hottest time of the year, I was walking by his house and he opened the door, motioned me to come inside. The hall was cool, shaded, and it took my eyes a minute to adjust to the dim light."I owe you," Mr. Ballou began, "but…"5I thought I'd save him the trouble of thinking up a new excuse. "No problem. Don't worry about it.""The bank made a mistake in my account," he continued, ignoring my words. "It will be cleared up in a day or two. But in the meantime I thought perhaps you could choose one or two volumes for a down payment."He gestured toward the walls and I saw that books were stacked everywhere. It was like a library, except with no order to the arrangement."Take your time," Mr. Ballou encouraged. "Read, borrow, keep. Find something you like. What do you read?""I don't know." And I didn't. I generally read what was in front of me, what I could get from the paperback stack at the drugstore, what I found at the library, magazines, the back of cereal boxes, comics. The idea of consciously seeking out a special title was new to me, but, I realized,not without appeal ─so I started to look through the piles of books."You actually read all of these?""This isn't much," Mr. Ballou said. "This is nothing, just what I've kept, the ones worth looking at a second time.""Pick for me, then."13He raised his eyebrows, cocked his head, and regarded me as though measuring me for a suit. After a moment, he nodded, searched through a stack, and handed me a dark red hardbound book, fairly thick." The Last of the Just," I read. "By Andre Schwarz-Bart. What's it about?""You tell me," he said. "Next week."I started after supper, sitting outdoors on an uncomfortable kitchen chair. (3) Within a few pages, the yard, the summer, disappeared, and I was plunged into the aching tragedy of the Holocaust, the extraordinary clash of good, represented by one decent man, and evil. Translated from French, the language was elegant, simple, impossible to resist. When the evening light finally failed I moved inside, read all through the night.To this day, thirty years later, I vividly remember the experience. It was my first voluntary encounter with world literature, and I was stunned by the concentrated power a novel could contain. I lacked the vocabulary, however, to translate my feelings into words, so the next week, when Mr. Ballou asked, "Well?" I only replied, "It was good.""Keep it, then," he said. "Shall I suggest another?"I nodded, and was presented with the paperback edition of Margaret Mead's Coming of Age in Samoa.20To make two long stories short, Mr. Ballou never paid me a cent for cutting his grass that year or the next, but for fifteen years I taught anthropology at Dartmouth College. (4) Summer reading was not the innocent entertainment I had assumed it to be, not a light-hearted, instantly forgettable escape in a hammock (though I have since enjoyed many of those, too). A book, if it arrives before you at the right moment, in the proper season, at an interval in the daily business of things, will change the course of all that follows.。

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